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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fructosamine test using a Nitroblue Tetrazolium (NBT) method offers many advantages: quickness, reproducibility, easy automation and unexpansiveness, but a standardization of the different methods is needed. The results can be expressed in absolute value of equivalent DMF per liter, except in pregnancy where mumol per g of protein is used. The interpretation of the results can be difficult in case of quantitative and/or qualitative proteins abnormalities: icterus and severe
chronic renal insufficiency
. Fructosamine is significantly higher in diabetic patients. It gives a good correlation with glycated haemoglobin but the provided information is different, concerning a shorter period of 2 to 3 weeks and perhaps more sensitive to recent glycaemic variations. Fructosamine test does not seem to be a good screening test for
diabetes
and impaired glucose tolerance. The test indications of the assay could be: situations where the dosage of glycated haemoglobin is not interpretable, diabetic pregnancy follow-up and short term evaluation of a therapeutic change on glycaemic control. However, the individual significance of fructosamine concentration remains to be assessed and seems to be less accurate than glycated albumin.
...
PMID:[Assay of fructosamine. Value and limits in diabetology]. 271 98
Medical data on 58 Gypsies in the area of Boston, Massachusetts, were analysed together with a pedigree linking 39 of them in a large extended kindred. Hypertension was found in 73%,
diabetes
in 46%, hypertriglyceridaemia in 80%, hypercholesterolaemia in 67%, occlusive vascular disease in 39%, and
chronic renal insufficiency
in 20%. 86% smoked cigarettes and 84% were obese. Thirteen of twenty-one marriages were consanguineous, yielding an inbreeding coefficient of 0.017. The analysis suggests that both heredity and environment influence the striking pattern of vascular disease in American Gypsies.
...
PMID:Disease, lifestyle, and consanguinity in 58 American Gypsies. 288 31
We have assessed the effects of acute and chronic administration of etodolac, ketoprofen, and indomethacin on renal function in patients with mild to moderate
chronic renal insufficiency
(CRI). We studied 18 normal volunteers and 24 patients with CRI due to hypertension and/or
diabetes mellitus
with creatinine clearances between 19 and 83 mL/min/1.73 m2. Clearance studies were performed with the first dose of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) to compare acute effects of the agent with a no-drug control. Subjects then received the NSAID for three to five days and, on the last day of study, underwent another clearance study to assess the effects of a single dose of NSAID superimposed on chronic dosing. With each dose of each NSAID, inulin and paraaminohippurate (PAH) clearances and fractional excretion of NA+ decreased. However, the baseline control collections after chronic dosing did not differ from the no-drug control periods. Hence, the decline in renal function with each dose is transient, and no overall adverse effect on renal function occurred with chronic dosing. In five patients with cirrhosis, we assessed the renal sparing effects of sulindac. After equilibration on a fixed sodium intake, they received a 200-mg dose of sulindac. In one patient, no adverse effect occurred; the remaining patients suffered declines in creatinine clearance of 29%, 87%, 37%, and 37%, respectively. This effect was transient and returned to control values six to eight hours after sulindac administration. At the time of maximal depression of renal function, serum concentrations of sulindac sulfide were comparable to those in subjects with normal hepatic function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs on renal function in patients with renal insufficiency and in cirrhotics. 294 56
A new method for analysis of excitability changes in human peripheral neuropathy is described. The range of the electrical threshold in a nerve is estimated in relative units from the ratio (S90-S10)/S10, where S10 and S90 are the stimulus voltages for 10% and 90% of maximal compound muscle potential. The ratio is increased if there is a fraction of high threshold fibres in the nerve; it is not affected by extraneural factors (e.g. distance to the nerve). The ratio was 0.16 +/- 0.03 in normals and significantly higher in subjects with
chronic renal insufficiency
or
diabetes mellitus
. Some of these had normal nerve conduction velocity. The ratio was markedly increased in the median nerve at the wrist in subjects with the carpal tunnel syndrome, which indicated that there are retrograde changes in the entrapped nerve fibres.
...
PMID:Changes in electrical threshold in human peripheral neuropathy. 298 39
Reactive perforating collagenosis is an uncommon skin disorder characterized by extrusion of collagen fibers through the epidermis. The lesions may appear in infancy, from genetic inheritance, or in adulthood in association with
diabetes mellitus
and/or
chronic renal insufficiency
. One case of reactive perforating collagenosis is reported, in a 42 year old man, with chronic renal failure
diabetes mellitus
and undergoing hemodialysis. The literature was reviewed on perforating dermatoses in adults associated with
diabetes
and
chronic renal insufficiency
.
...
PMID:[Reactive perforating collagenosis associated with chronic renal insufficiency and diabetes mellitus]. 307 Jan 98
The aetiopathogenesis of the diabetic nephropathy today is still unknown. Uncontested is the contribution of chronic hyperglycemia in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. For this, there are convincing evidences from clinical and experimental experiences including transplantation surgery. The quality of the metabolic adjustment of the diabetics from the first time of
diabetes
manifestation is important to prevent the development of diabetic nephropathy. For this, an almost normoglycemic compensation of the glucose metabolism is mandatory. More problematically is the management of the diabetic metabolism during
chronic renal insufficiency
. Considerable fluctuations of the blood glucose concentration are predominately in the daily profile. The intensive conventional metabolic therapy by multiple insuline injections under self control of the blood glucose level are indicated absolutely in those patients. The therapeutic aim is a smoothing of the blood glucose fluctuation. With that it is possible--together with the elimination of hemodynamic risk factors--to delay effectively a progradient decline of the glomerulo-filtration rate and to improve the assumption to an invasive therapy.
...
PMID:[Problems of metabolic control in type I diabetic patients with chronic renal failure]. 329 84
We analyzed 137 episodes of hypoglycemia (serum glucose less than or equal to 49 mg per deciliter) occurring in 94 adult patients hospitalized during a six-month period at a tertiary care hospital. Forty-five percent of the patients had
diabetes mellitus
, and administered insulin was implicated in 90 percent of episodes in diabetics. Hypoglycemia in diabetic patients occurred under a variety of circumstances, frequently because of decreased caloric intake related to illness or hospital routine. Insulin-induced hypoglycemia also occurred during treatment of hyperkalemia (eight patients) or during hyperglycemia related to total parenteral nutrition (six patients). Forty-six of the 94 patients had
chronic renal insufficiency
, and 20 of these 46 had underlying
diabetes mellitus
. Thus, renal insufficiency unrelated to
diabetes mellitus
was the second most frequent diagnosis associated with hypoglycemia. The majority of other cases of hypoglycemia were related to liver disease, infections, shock, pregnancy, neoplasia, or burns. Hypoglycemia was not the apparent cause of death in any patient, but the overall hospital mortality was 27 percent and was related to the degree of hypoglycemia and the number of risk factors for hypoglycemia. We conclude that hypoglycemia is a common problem in hospitalized patients, is common in renal insufficiency, is usually iatrogenic, and correlates with high mortality in severely ill patients.
...
PMID:Hypoglycemia in hospitalized patients. Causes and outcomes. 353 67
Abuse of analgesics (AA) is a well known cause of chronic interstitial nephritis. Recently a noxious effect of AA on the pancreas has been suggested based upon case observations, and first evidence for association of AA with chronic pancreatitis was presented. In the present prospective clinical study 95 patients with
chronic renal insufficiency
, in 53 of them associated with AA, were investigated for evidence of chronic pancreatitis (e.g. history of pancreatitis, pancreatic calcifications,
diabetes
and exocrine function). The patients were divided into two groups: group A consisted of 53 patients with chronic nephropathy associated with AA, and control group B consisted of 42 patients with chronic nephropathy of other etiology. Pancreatic calcifications were observed in 5 cases of group A (10%), but in none of the patients of group B. Exocrine insufficiency was found in 2 of the 5 cases with pancreatic calcifications. Only one of the 5 patients had a history of pancreatitis in association with exocrine and endocrine insufficiency. Thus pancreatic calcifications, which are virtually pathognomonic for chronic pancreatitis, were found exclusively in the group with chronic nephropathy due to analgesic abuse. Chronic pancreatitis in this group of patients is likely to be overlooked because of the lack of clinical and laboratory evidence. The present data support our previous observations that AA may be an etiological factor in chronic calcifying pancreatitis. This first evidence for a drug-induced form of chronic pancreatitis is presented.
...
PMID:[Chronic pancreatitis as a possible result of analgesic abuse]. 358 21
The frequency of
chronic renal insufficiency
is inspected in a closed population. 3.06% of the inhabitants of the district of Neubrandenburg suffer from
diabetes mellitus
. 1,108 diabetics (these are 5.84% of all diabetics) have had the
diabetes
for 15 and more years. 44.91% of these long-term diabetics have an increased creatinine level. There are 9 long-term diabetics at the age up to 49 years per 100,000 inhabitants with restricted renal functions. The
chronic renal insufficiency
, which occurs with diabetics significantly more frequent than with non-diabetics, must be considered in the planning of dialysis capacities.
...
PMID:[Frequency of renal failure in long-term diabetics]. 387 61
Heparin sodium is routinely used in the prophylaxis against deep venous thrombosis in medical and surgical patients. While most physicians are aware of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia and skin necrosis, the association of heparin and hyperkalemia is less well recognized. We present four cases in which the use of heparin was associated with hyperkalemia and discuss the pathophysiology. Our findings suggest that hyperkalemia can develop with the use of low-dose heparin, within seven days of initiating heparin therapy, and that patients with
diabetes mellitus
or
chronic renal insufficiency
are especially predisposed to this complication.
...
PMID:Heparin-induced hyperkalemia. 400 33
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